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Facing up to global change requires extensive collaboration and integration of research efforts
The CSIR has been involved in research into global change phenomena since the early 1990s, anticipating the growth in importance of these issues at national and international levels. With the international climate negotiations in Copenhagen in full swing, these research efforts are now coming into fruition. Pat Manders, acting executive director: CSIR Natural Resources and the Environment, highlights key research efforts.
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DST's forward-looking strategy to address global change
As global change research reveals rising evidence of climatic and associated changes, it is becoming clear that these changes are likely to impact many sectors of South African society. South Africa's Department of Science and Technology (DST) is meeting this challenge head on by means of an initiative to address global change.
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SA scientists argue for an African perspective on climate change
Southern Africa's remarkable geographic, biological, social and economic diversity make the region ideal for the study and inculcation of the principle of improved earth stewardship - therefore the establishment of an Applied Centre for Climate and Earth Systems Science (ACCESS).
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Climate change not the only threat
In a presentation to parliament in Cape Town recently, a group of researchers described climate change "as an integrated and accumulated result of several of man's mistakes" now adding a quantum to these other threats - making the environment and modern society less resilient and more vulnerable to the impact of climate change.
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A new-generation Atlas to inform global change solutions
South Africa's Risk and Vulnerability Atlas, a project initiated and funded by South Africa's Department of Science and Technology, will be launched in the first three months of 2010, in electronic as well as hardcopy format.
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Research should focus more on adaptation to climate change
South Africa's research capacity for dealing with the economics and sustainability of global change should focus more on adaptation than on mitigating the impacts. At the same time current research capacity in this field is limited, uncoordinated and fragmented.
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